"When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying the cross."
-- Sinclair Lewis

Friday, December 21, 2012

You can't make this stuff up: "Mark Sanford set to run for Congress again"

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He's ba-ack!Here he is at the 2012 Republican National Convention. (And we know how well that turned out.)

by Ken

This one comes from the You Can't Make This Stuff Up Dept., with additional reporting from the You're Kidding, Right? Dept.

Remember how we were just talking about the dangers of the media frenzy to provide information consumers with "scoops." Well, this one apparently goes to CNN, which is welcome to it. What's worse is, there doesn't appear to be any reason to doubt the story. Unless you count common sense, which apparently no longer figures into it.

Former South Carolina governor Mark Sanford (R) is prepping his political comeback and is planning to announce he will run for the congressional seat of Sen.-designate Tim Scott (R-S.C.), according to a strategist with knowledge of Sanford’s plans.

Sanford’s fast-rising political career was derailed in 2009 after his mysterious absence from public view led to an admission of an affair with a woman from Argentina. He served out his term, but he and his wife divorced and he is now engaged to his mistress.
A special election should allow Sanford a unique opportunity to launch a political comeback.

For one, he’s running for the seat he represented for six years in the late 1990s, so he’s got strong ties to voters there (though two cycles of redistricting have changed the lines to some degree). And second, the special election primary is likely to feature a crowded field in which anything can happen.

If no candidate gets 50 percent of the vote, the race goes to a primary runoff two weeks later. The seat is considered safe for Republicans in the general election.

But Sanford still has to fight to regain his good name. The most recent polls since he left office show well more than half of South Carolina voters view him unfavorably.

Perhaps most intriguing about Sanford’s comeback has been the idea that he could be pitted in the primary against his ex-wife, Jenny Sanford, who has said she is considering a campaign of her own. Jenny Sanford distanced herself from her husband soon after the affair went public and was considered a potential Senate appointee before Scott got the nod.

But the strategist said Sanford would not run against his ex-wife, which suggests Jenny Sanford won’t run for the seat.

Other declared or possible candidates include state Sen. Larry Grooms; state Sen. Tom Davis, who is Sanford’s former chief of staff; Paul Thurmond, the son of the late senator Strom Thurmond (R) and a recently elected state senator whom Scott defeated in a 2010 primary runoff; state House Majority Whip Jimmy Merrill; and state Rep. Peter McCoy.

The primary is likely to be held in March, depending on when Scott vacates his House seat.

He can't win, can he? Then again, look at the rest of the "talent" pool standing in his way. In any case, if it's the will of the people of South Carolina that they be represented by low-life scum, who has the right to stand in their way?